Animal Potty Chair

ABSTRACT

The present invention discloses an animal potty chair, particularly for a dog or cat, to be used indoor and/or outdoor to aid civilization of domestic animals and to improve quality of life for millions of families with animals. The animal potty chair comprising: (1) a defined space to guide an animal to release waste to a designated area; (2) a supporting mean covered with a mesh for an animal to stand and to release waste (3) a sealer-adaptor of the toilet; (4) a receptacle mean for animal waste; (5) a sensor to monitor an animal to come to a designated place; (6) a signal to indicate that an animal is/was at a designated place. The current invention has caused the revolutionary transformation of a pet from an accident-causing animal to a civilized non-human member of the family. There will be no more wet urine paw tracks left anywhere in the owner&#39;s house. Solid wastes stay on the top of the mesh, semi-liquid or loose feces fall into the toilet. The owner only needs to do minimal housekeeping, much easier than taking care of a human baby. The smell of the animal waste is reduced dramatically after the animal gets acquainted with using the current invention of an animal toilet.

TECHNICAL FIELD OF THE INVENTION

The present invention relates to an animal potty chair, particularly for a dog or cat, to be used indoor and/or outdoor to aid civilization of domestic animals and to improve quality of life for millions of families with animals.

BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION

Dogs and cats are wonderful creatures and very popular companions for the pet owners and families. They protect the owner's home and family. However, every time the animal eats or drinks, waste metabolites will be generated and released. The owner must be responsible for the waste clean-up of house-bound pets. Even though many pets are trained, there can be inadvertent accidents. It would be especially bad during the hot summers or cold winter to remove animal waste from the house. The smell could be stifling for family members. The urine smell could be strong enough that it would be embarrassing for the family to bring guests over.

It is common for the animal to accidently release waste any area in the house. It is desirable to clean pet messes as quickly and thoroughly as possible. When the waste is on the carpet, it takes effort to identify the odiferous areas of the carpet. Sometimes black-light source detection is needed to identify dried urine spots. For deep-cleaning the problem areas, one must use a steam carpet-cleaning machine or a carpet-shampoo machine, not a typical vacuum. Other times, one must use an enzymatic pet odor-neutralizing powder on the affected areas. Many other efforts must be taken to remove pet-odor.

Cleaning urine and feces of the pet is an unpleasant but essential task of pet ownership. This task is particularly burdensome for those who live in tall apartment buildings, or travel with their pets. It is desirable to have a device for preventing a pet from touching the waste in order to keep house floor clean. Many pet owners have trained the pet to go outside for releasing waste metabolites. However, the family member may find it very inconvenient in scheduling to let their pets out and/or take them on walks for toilet purposes, or in the case of airports—impossible. If one is delayed in going back home due to a variety of reasons, the animal, after experiencing a long period of stress, may have to release the waste in the house and cause a number of issues. Similarly, travel delays could strand a pet for hours inside of the airport. For maintaining a civilized life, a pet needs a functional toilet. The owner family will ultimately receive a number of benefits like (1) less involvement in cleaning waste materials; (2) ease in maintaining a clean house; (3) less worry that their pet would cause an accident if a functional toilet were to be provided.

Currently, a number of animal toilets are available. WizDog Indoor Potty System for Dogs is a plastic tray covered with a mesh. This device is very useful for collecting urine and largely prevents wet paw tracking throughout the house. It is a simple and low-cost pet toilet in the house. However, when the pet is not standing in the right position on the device, quite often, urine or feces can fall outside of the collecting tray. To ensure the accuracy for waste materials to fall within the tray, the pet needs a guide. Hence, the device needs to be improved. The current invention will resolve this issue.

An animal litter disclosed by Takeshi et al. (U.S. Pat. No. 7,467,600) comprises a plurality of granular materials having water-shedding properties and second granular material having liquid-absorbing properties. Although this system has advantages, the granular materials can easily be brought to the house floor by an animal. Therefore, a better device for indoor use needs to be developed.

Other prior art devices for collecting pet waste are shown in the Gloor U.S. Pat. No. 7,434,539; Dennis U.S. Pat. No. 4,117,555; the Clark U.S. Pat. No. 4,979,469 and the Hochman U.S. Patent Publication No. 2004/0011297. Although each of those prior arts is uniquely useful, there is no mean for a dog or cat to use a human toilet. An ideally-functional animal toilet needs to be developed.

Other prior art devices for training animal, for giving animal a beauty looking, and others, cited here, U.S. Pat. No. 7,467,600 December 2008 Ikegami; U.S. Pat. No. 7481021, January 2009 Riddell; U.S. Pat. No. 7,464,668 December 2008 Brewington; U.S. Pat. No. 7,395,784 July 2008 Hirokawa; U.S. Pat. No. 7,434,539 October 2008, Gloor; U.S. Pat. No. 7,373,673 May 2008 Holland, U.S. Pat. No. 7,479,889 January 2009 Kazdin; U.S. Pat. No. 7,444,959 November 2008 Hensley, are very useful for the designed purposes, but all cannot meet the toilet need of a civilized animal.

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS

FIG. 1 is an upper, front, right-side perspective view of the top of an animal potty chair embodying present inventions, showing a mesh covered tray with surrounding walls and doors. This will ensure the animal will release urine or feces only onto the mesh.

FIG. 2 is an upper, front, right-side perspective view of an animal potty-chair for forming an animal toilet embodying the present invention, showing a mesh-covered chair surface with surrounding sides, a sensor linked to a light as a signal triggered after an animal is standing on the potty-chair. This ensures the animal release urine or feces into the area covered with a mesh. When this potty-chair is placed on the top of a human toilet, pet's urine and feces will flow or drop into toilet. When this potty-chair is placed on the top of a container, pet's urine and feces will flow or drop into the container.

FIG. 3 is a toilet sealer/adaptor. This part is to seal the connection between the surrounding edge of the potty-chair seating surface (below the mesh) and the top of the human toilet to prevent animal waste from flowing or dropping to outside of the toilet. It also prevents moving away of the potty chair from the top of the human toilet.

FIG. 4 is a smell and sound generating device, which is to be used to train the animal when the bottle is filled with a liquid with either pleasant or bad smell received by the specific animal.

DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE PRESENT INVENTION

As required by the patent regulation, detailed embodiments of the present invention are disclosed herein. However, it is to be understood that the disclosed embodiments are merely examples of the invention, which may be embodied in various forms. Therefore, specific structural and functional details disclosed herein are not to be interpreted as limiting, but merely as a basis for the claims and as a representative basis for teaching one skilled in the art to variously employ the present invention in virtually any appropriately detailed structure.

EMBODIMENT OF THE INVENTION

FIG. 1 is a top of an animal potty chair embodying the present invention. Without limitation on the generality of useful applications of the animal toilet, an exemplary application, described herein, is for receiving, storing and discharging waste from domestic animals, such as cats and dogs. The animal toilet shown in FIG. 1 has guiding walls around the waste receiving unit. The animal can enter into the toilet from either direction, but preferentially from one direction enforced by a pair of one-directional entrance and exit. The waste collection unit is covered with a full piece of mesh, or several pieces of mesh. The entire apparatus is scalable and thereby adaptable for animals and toilets of various sizes. Any safe materials can be used to manufacture this animal toilet, such as plastic, metal, wood, or in any combination.

The animal toilet shown in FIG. 1 includes a receptacle base 1, a mesh top 2, an inwards door 3, a sensor 4, two sidewalls 5 and an outwards door 6. The base 1 can be a human toilet, or any container, and can be made with any safe materials for animal and human, such as plastic. The mesh top can let urine flow down to base 1 easily but strong enough to support an animal. The mesh can be made in one, two or more pieces. When the two pieces of mesh are separated horizontally, the fecal material easily drops down to the container or toilet in the centrally opened space. In another design, the mesh can have an appropriate open to make it easy for the pet owner to put feces into toilet.

If the receptacle base 1 is a container, the container can be either dry or can be filled with a functional liquid, such as deodorant, or disinfectant. The receptacle base 1 can also be a human toilet.

The entrance of the animal toilet is formed by a door 3 which can only open inwards. This will force the animal to precisely release waste at a specific standing position by heading to the exit 6 only. The two sidewalls 5 keep the animal within the toilet space and to release waste materials only onto the mesh top. The exit 6 of the animal toilet can only open outwards, which is to reinforce what the animal learned on how to enter, use and leave its toilet. It is very easy to assembly the one-directional door by using any means, such as a spring fixed on the door and frame of the wall.

A sensor 4 is linked with a signal device, like a nightlight or a flashing light placed in a place easy for the person to observe, to call attention of a person in the house to come to the animal toilet to do a simple cleaning. This sensor is triggered by the weight when the animal is standing on the mesh top. Timely cleaning of the animal waste on the mesh helps to reduce the concentration of any unpleasant smell materials in the house. It also helps to prevent contact with fecal material when the animal re-uses the toilet.

FIG. 2 is a unique potty-chair for an animal to use human toilet when this apparatus is placed on the top of human toilet. It comprises of those essential parts as shown in FIG. 1—the supporting frame 7, the mesh top 8, the three sidewalls 9, the signal 10, and the sensor 11. The one or two stairs in front of the chair is not shown, as the stairs may not be needed if the potty-chair is relatively accessible for the animal to jump upon, especially a big dog. This space may only have one entrance if the overall space of the human toilet is limited. If space is not a restrictive issue, the one-directional doors shown in FIG. 1 should be assembled. For the one-entrance potty-chair, the surrounding walls are needed to ensure that the animal discharge its waste within the target area—the mesh top. The mesh top can be made with one, two or more pieces, and can have an appropriate-sized hole/open to let the feces drop down. The owner should train the animal to turn the body around after entering the toilet, and to face out before releasing its waste. The overall size of the potty chair varies to meet the special need for a cat, a small dog, or a big dog, as well as for fitting onto the human toilet.

FIG. 3 is a toilet sealer/adaptor. This apparatus is to tightly seal the toilet top which is assembled directly under the seat of the potty-chair. This apparatus can also be an integral part of the potty-chair. Any safe material can be used to manufacture this apparatus, such as plastic or rubber. This apparatus can be hard, soft, or in between. It can be in a funnel shape, or in any other shape to loosely or tightly fit into the open-top of the toilet. This sealer/adaptor can also secure that the position of the potty chair on the top of toilet will not be changed after many uses by an animal. This sealer/adaptor can be made separately from the potty chair, or can be made as an integral part of the potty chair.

FIG. 4 is a smell and sound signal generator for training animals. This signal generator is designed based upon a liquid sprayer. The container 12 is a bottle which is typically made of safe plastic. The composition of the liquid inside of the bottle 13 varies depending on the training purpose of encouraging or disapproval of the animal's action. The trigger 14 of the signal generator is used to start the signal. The unique mean 15 is for generating mist and sound at the same time when a pressured liquid is flowing through.

The combinational smell of the water extracts from orange peel, peppermint and ginger is safe and pleasant for most people, but is much disliked by many dogs and cats. The present invention provides a mix of those extracts for the pet owner to make a pet training liquid. The mix can be in the form of a dry powder, concentrated liquid, or ready-to-use liquid. The owner can fill the freshly made liquid into the sound-signal generator. The mix of the three extracts can be made in any proportion, preferably in a ratio of 1:1:1 in dry weight.

The current invention has caused the revolutionary transformation of a pet from an accident-causing animal to a civilized non-human member of the family. There will be no more wet urine paw tracks left anywhere in the owner's house. Solid wastes stay on the top of the mesh, semi-liquid or loose feces fall into the toilet. The owner only needs to do minimal housekeeping, much easier than taking care of a human baby. The smell of the animal waste is reduced dramatically after the animal gets acquainted with using the current invention of an animal toilet.

EXAMPLE 1

This example illustrates how a small dog has been trained to use its toilet disclosed in FIG. 1. Before the toilet was available, the small puppy had been trained to wait for his owner to come home, then to go out of the house to release waste. Frequently, this small dog could not hold wastes for that long and released urine or feces inside the house. Whenever this happened, the owner took a lot of effort to clean the carpet and other places. After suffering from this frustration many times, the owner designed a new toilet and started to train his small dog in the backyard. Whenever the dog had a toilet need, the owner brought the dog to the newly designed toilet. The dog was smart enough to use this head to open the uni-directional door after the owner showed how to do it, then stood on the top of mesh to release urine. Afterwards, the dog tried to go out by pushing on various places of the wall and finally opened the one-directional exit door for going out. The owner then trained the dog to release feces the same way outside of the house. After the dog was able to do both outdoors, the owner trained the dog to release urine and feces in the house. Afterwards, the owner is less pressured to hurry home after school and work to take care of his little dog.

EXAMPLE2

This example illustrates how a small dog has been trained to use the potty-chair to release waste to a human toilet disclosed in FIG. 2. After the owner successfully trained the dog using the animal toilet described in example 1, the owner had to do a lot cleaning after the animal released waste. The owner then designed a special potty-chair by replacing the flat-seat surface with a mesh. Because the dog is a small one, the owner placed a plastic stool before the potty-chair. When the dog expressed elimination needs, the owner placed the potty-chair on the top of a human toilet. The little dog urinated after standing on the top of the potty-chair and all urine drained into the toilet through the mesh. The owner only used water to rinse the mesh. When the owner observed the water leakage to outside of the toilet, he made a toilet sealer-adaptor and placed it onto the top of the toilet, and let the potty-chair seal tightly on the sealer/adaptor. This sealer-adaptor completely prevented water leakage. The next time when the dog expressed an elimination desire, the owner brought the dog to the potty-chair again. The dog discharged feces onto the top of the potty-chair. The owner separated the two pieces of the mesh to let the feces drop to the toilet. Then, the mesh was rinsed with water and placed back to the seat of the potty-chair. After a few times of training, the small dog could do those things easily at any time during the day and night. Although the owner has to do minimal cleaning after his dog released waste, the newly designed potty-chair significantly saved his time. His puppy does not need to wait for the entire day to release urine or feces while the owner's family members are at work or at school. The animal expresses less stress and the owner's family no longer has to deal with elimination accidents within the house.

EXAMPLE3

The owner of the small dog in Example 2 tried to know as soon as possible after his dog released waste after using the potty-chair placed on the top of a human toilet. He placed a weight-triggered sensor under the entry part of the mesh. When the animal jumped onto the potty-chair, a flashing light in the hallway was turned on. After the dog left the bathroom, the owner walked in the bathroom to check if any cleaning work was needed. Most times, the owner just used a water-sprayer to rinse the mesh. With the sensor and the flashing light, the owner could timely take care of the animal waste with a minimum effort. The house therefore was maintained at a lower level of animal waste smell.

EXAMPLE4

This example illustrates how a cat had been trained to release waste to a human toilet through using a potty-chair disclosed in FIG. 2. After the owner of the small dog happily trained his dog in example 2, he made another potty-chair and gave to his relative family who has a cat. The owner of the cat placed a plastic stool before the potty-chair, and taught the cat to come to the potty-chair to release waste. At the beginning, a piece of the cooked fish was placed into a stainless steel mesh infuser ball. The ball was tightly fixed to the back of the potty-chair. This made it very easy for the cat to come to the potty-chair. It took only two days for the cat's owner to train the cat to use the potty-chair placed on the top of a human toilet to release waste. After this training, the cat's owner and family members have been enjoying a clean house without doing much cleaning work.

EXAMPLE 5

This example illustrates how a cat can be trained to change her habit by using the smell-sound signal generator disclosed in FIG. 4. The other relative family of the small dog's owner described in Example 1 has an old cat. When the family tried to train the cat to use the potty-chair, the old cat was not cooperative. She insisted in releasing the waste in her litter box. The owner of the small dog in Example 1 provided a smell-sound signal generator to his relative. After spraying the offensive smelling, the cat was out of her house for a few houses. The owner of the cat also used a cooked fish contained in a stainless steel mesh infuser ball tightly fixed to the back of the potty-chair as a lure. This push-pull tactics gradually changed the old cat's habit and finally, the old cat could habitually use the potty-chair to release waste. This change made the indoor cat house truly a clean house for the cat, and the family members have no more suffer from smelling cat's urine in the house during those winter days.

Numerous pet owners now have a simple and reliable method to let the dog or cat to live freely in the house with a minimum cleaning effort.

INDUSTRIAL APPLICABILITY

Through the convenient use of the animal toilet of this invention, pet owners now have a simple, safe and inexpensive apparatus that can be used to improve their pets' and their own quality of life, and to free them from cleaning animal wastes scattered around the house. Numerous pet owners will greatly benefit from using the new animal toilet and training materials disclosed herein.

Those skilled in the art will appreciate that changes and modifications can be made to the apparatus, the preferred embodiment of composition of the animal training liquid, and the methods of use disclosed herein without departing from the spirit and scope of the present invention as set forth as defined by the following claims.

References Cited U.S. Patent Documents 4,117,555 October 1978 Dennis 4,979,469 December 1990 Clark 2004/0011297 January 2004 Hochman 2005/0081793 April 2005 Sannikka 2006/0037549 February 2006 Kim 3,964,437 June 1976 Brown 7,258,076 August 2007 Gantt 7,467,600 December 2008 Ikegami 7,481,021 January 2009 Riddell 7,464,668 December 2008 Brewington 7,395,784 July 2008 Hirokawa 7,434,539 October 2008 Gloor 7,373,673 May 2008 Holland 7,479,889 January 2009 Kazdin 7,444,959 November 2008 Hensley

OTHER REFERENCES

Original PETaPOTTY Indoor Dog Poppy lawn Toilet System. http://www.amzon.com/ORIGINAL-PETaPOTTY-INDOOR-TOILET-SYSTEM/dp/B000RO660W

WizDog Indoor Potty System for Dogs http://shopping.msn.com/specs/wizdog-indoor-potty-system-for-dogs-size-wizdog-single/itemid204320989/?itemtext=itemname:wizdog-indoor-potty-system-for-dogs-size-wizdog-single

Small Animal Lifter Boxes & Supplies http://shopping.yahoo.com/s:Small%20Animal%20Supplies:130611-Small%20Animal%20Supply%20Type=Small%20Litter%20Boxes%20&%20Supplies 

1. An animal potty chair comprising a defined space to guide an animal to release waste to a designated area; a supporting mean covered with a mesh for an animal to stand and to release waste; a sealer-adaptor of the toilet; a receptacle mean for animal waste
 2. The animal potty chair in accordance with claim 1, wherein the said a defined space includes but not limited to a wall and doors for the animal.
 3. The animal potty chair in accordance with claim 1, wherein the said a supporting mean includes but not limited to a potty-chair with a mesh surface. The mesh can be one, two or more pieces with or without an open mean.
 4. The animal potty chair in accordance with claim 1, wherein the said a sealer-adaptor includes but not limited to an apparatus to seal the top of the toilet to prevent leakage of any materials) liquid or solid, soft or hard, to outside of the toilet, and to fix the potty chair onto the toilet or container.
 5. The animal potty chair in accordance with claim 1, wherein the said a receptacle mean for animal waste includes but not limited to a human toilet.
 6. An animal potty chair comprising a defined space to guide an animal to release waste to a designated area; a supporting mean covered with a mesh for an animal to stand and to release waste; a sealer-adaptor of the toilet; a receptacle mean for animal waste; a sensor to monitor an animal to come to a designated place; a signal to indicate that an animal is/was at a designated place.
 7. An animal training device comprising: a container, such as a sprayer bottle a narrow open-space to generate mist and sound when a liquid is pressured through a liquid containing the mix of the extracts from orange peel, peppermint and ginger
 8. A method of using an animal potty chair of claim 1 to keep house clean and less smelly.
 9. A method of using an animal potty chair of claim 6 to keep house clean and less smelly.
 10. A method of using an animal training device of claim 7 to train any animal to use the animal potty chair of claim
 1. 11. A method of using an animal training device of claim 7 to train any animal to use the animal potty chair of claim
 6. 